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Franciscus Cornelis Donders (1818–1889)

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Abstract

Franciscus Cornelis Donders was educated at Duizel and Boxmeer before entering the Military Medical School and the medical faculty at Utrecht University in 1835. In 1840, he received his MD from Leiden and spent 2 years in practice at Vlissingen before returning to Utrecht, where he was appointed as an extraordinary professor to lecture on forensic medicine, anthropology, general biology and ophthalmology. Refraction by the eye is complex, since the ray of light passes through many changes of refractive index in its path, and Donders simplified the account of the process by establishing an equivalent refractive system: the reduced eye. When Donders opened an Eye Hospital in 1858, he devoted himself to clinical ophthalmology, making fundamental advances in providing spectacles to correct errors of refraction—which he separated from errors of accommodation. In 1862, Donders was promoted as an ordinary professor at Utrecht and he handed over the greater part of his practice to his pupil Hermann Snellen. From narrow specialisation, Donders was freed to return to the broader physiology; subatmospheric pressure in the pleura was for a while referred to as ‘Donders’ pressure’; he also devised a method of measuring the mental reaction time taken in making discrimination, rather than the simple reaction time in which no choice is involved. He was widely honoured, presiding at international congresses, and elected as a foreign member of the Royal Society. He died suddenly on 14 March 1889, but his work lives on.

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Notes

  1. In this schematic eye, the centre of curvature lies 7.3 mm from the outer surface of the cornea and in the normal eye focussed for distant vision (outer) parallel rays come to a focus on the retina 15.5 mm behind the centre of curvature of the imaginary convex surface in the reduced, or schematic, eye.

    In the reduced eye, there is only a single, fictitious, spherical refracting surface. This fictitious surface, at which the imagined refraction takes place, is named the principal plane 1.5 mm behind the anterior surface of the cornea. The nodal point at the centre of curvature of this surface is 7.2 mm behind the anterior surface of the cornea. The posterior (or second) principal focus must fall on the retina of the normal eye focussed for infinity. The anterior focal length is 17.2 mm and the posterior 22.9 mm, giving the dioptric power 58.5 D.

References

  1. Sterling W (1966) Some apostles of physiology. Dawsons of Pall Mall, London (reprint of 1902 edition of Waterlow & Sons, London)

  2. Helmholtz H (1909) Handbuch der physiologischen optik translated and edited by JPC Southall Treatise in Physiological Optics, 3rd edn, vol 1. Optical Society of America, New York, pp 388–390

  3. Donders FC (1864) On the anomalies of refraction and accommodation of the eye, translated by Dr. William Daniel Moore of Dublin. The New Sydenham Society, London

  4. Snellen H (1862) Test types for determining the acuteness of vision. van den Weiger, Utrecht

  5. Snellen H (1897) On the method of determining the acuity of vision. In: Norris WF, Oliver CA (eds) Systems of the eye, vol 2. Lippincott, Philadelphia, pp 11–29

  6. Donders FC (1868) Die Schnelligkeit psychischer Prozesse. Archiv fűr Anatomie und Physiologie und wissenschaftliche Medizin, pp 657–681

  7. Bowman W (1891) In memoriam of Frans Cornelis Donders. Proc Roy Soc 49:vii–xxiv

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Correspondence to C. S. Breathnach.

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Timoney, P.J., Breathnach, C.S. Franciscus Cornelis Donders (1818–1889). Ir J Med Sci 184, 573–575 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11845-015-1311-8

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11845-015-1311-8

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